It has remained one of the most frequently performed items at Holocaust commemoration ceremonies, alongside the well-loved partisan anthem “Zog Nit Keynmol az du geyst dem letstn veg” (“Never say that you are walking the final road”), ...

Zog Nit Keynmol Never Say In April 1943, the Nazis intensified their round-up of Jews around Vilna, Poland. The Vilna-born poet Hirsh Glik escaped and joined the partisans. It was the time of the heroic uprising of the Warsaw Ghetto, ' and ...

‎"Zog
Nit Keynmol", meaning "Never say" was written in 1943 by Hirsh Glick, a
young inmate of the Vilna Ghetto, who was later deported to a
concentration camp in Estonia, managed to escape and has never been
heard from after that. He was presumably
captured and executed by the Germans.